Protective effects of dietary spirulina against cadmium chloride exposed histoarchitectural changes in the liver of freshwater catfish Clarias batrachus (Linnaeus, 1758)


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Authors

  • Bilal Ahmad Dar Project Implementation Unit, National Agricultural Innovation Project, Krishi Anusandhan Bhawan-II, Iindian Council of Agricultural Research Pusa, New Delhi-110012 India Project Implementation Unit,National Agricultural Innovation Project, Component-4 Research Associate
  • Rumysa Khaliq Dandroo Department of Biotechnology, Saifia Science College, Bhopal-462 026, India
  • Ghanshyam Nath Jha Project Implementation Unit, National Agricultural Innovation Project (NAIP), Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), Pusa, New Delhi-110012, India
  • Pinky Kaur Department of Zoology B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India
  • T. A. Qureshi Department of Zoology , B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India

https://doi.org/10.21077/

Abstract

Hepatoprotective and antioxidant effects of dietary supplementation of Spirulina platensis (SP) against cadmium chloride (CdCl2) exposed catfish, Clarias batrachus was elucidated during sixty days experiment and the histoarchitectural changes in the liver were assessed. One hundred fishes (average weight 90±6 g and average length 20±4 cm) were randomly distributed (20 in each tank) into 5 treatment groups viz., T0 (control), T1 and T2 (exposed to 4 ppm CdCl2) and T3 and T4 (exposed to 8 ppm CdCl2). Fishes of T0, T1 and T3 groups were fed with normal (basal) diet, while of T2 and T4 fed with 10% SP supplemented diet. Deshaping of hepatocytes, eccentric position of nuclei, enucleation, and development of vacuoles in cell cytoplasm, erythrocyte infiltration into blood sinusoids and necrosis of hepatic tissue were common features of T1 and T3 groups of fishes, while the lesions were less severe in case of T2 and T4 groups of fishes fed with SP supplemented diet. Addition of spirulina at 10% level in diet was found to be beneficial to mitigates histopathological disorders of liver due to cadmium chloride exposure, and proved the protective effect of SP against liver alteration in fishes due to heavy metal toxicity. The results of the present study indicate that dietary spirulina can be recommended as a protective agent against hepatotoxicity in fishes.

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Author Biographies

  • Bilal Ahmad Dar, Project Implementation Unit, National Agricultural Innovation Project, Krishi Anusandhan Bhawan-II, Iindian Council of Agricultural Research Pusa, New Delhi-110012 India Project Implementation Unit,National Agricultural Innovation Project, Component-4 Research Associate
    Project Implementation Unit,National Agricultural Innovation Project, Component-4Research Associate
  • Rumysa Khaliq Dandroo, Department of Biotechnology, Saifia Science College, Bhopal-462 026, India

    Department of Biotechnology, Saifia Science College, Bhopal-462 026, India

  • Ghanshyam Nath Jha, Project Implementation Unit, National Agricultural Innovation Project (NAIP), Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), Pusa, New Delhi-110012, India

    Project Implementation Unit, National Agricultural Innovation Project (NAIP), Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), Pusa, New Delhi-110012, India

  • Pinky Kaur, Department of Zoology B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India
    Department of Zoology, B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India
  • T. A. Qureshi, Department of Zoology , B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India

    Department of Zoology, B.U., Bhopal-462 026, India

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Submitted

2013-10-31

Published

2014-09-26

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dar, B. A., Dandroo, R. K., Jha, G. N., Kaur, P., & Qureshi, T. A. (2014). Protective effects of dietary spirulina against cadmium chloride exposed histoarchitectural changes in the liver of freshwater catfish Clarias batrachus (Linnaeus, 1758). Indian Journal of Fisheries, 61(3). https://doi.org/10.21077/
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